Swamp Pop Music

Rock 'n' roll came to the swamp and the result was an all-new sound.

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By Alex V. Cook

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Swamp pop in Louisiana.

There is no greater example of how Louisiana enjoys being itself than swamp pop. It’s a style of music born out of a regional interpretation of rock ‘n’ roll in the 1950s that defies time, continuing its popularity today.

“Swamp pop music was created without us knowing it was a different genre,” says Johnnie Allan. Many call him the “King of Swamp Pop,” having recorded “Lonely Days and Lonely Nights” and his stirring version of “The Promised Land,” both swamp pop anthems. Allan is quick to add, “I don’t go around wearing a crown."

“Rod Bernard, Warren Storm, Tommy McClain, Clint West and I started recording this music in the late 1950s and early 1960s, not realizing that we were creating a new genre of music. It was called swamp pop in the 1970s by a guy from England named Bill Millar. We just called it south Louisiana music.

“It’s a gumbo or jambalaya; a true native Louisiana music genre,” explains Sharon Fontenot, curator of the Louisiana Swamp Pop Museum in Ville Platte, designated by the legislature in 1995 as the Swamp Pop Capital of the World. The museum is housed in a restored Southern Pacific train depot, where knowledgeable docents, some of whom are swamp pop musicians, tell about the jukebox, costumes and other items on display.

“It’s a cousin to zydeco and Cajun music, but is the red-headed stepchild that never got the recognition that the other two did.”

This may be true from a distance, but to swamp pop fans, it is the Louisiana music. Just witness the massive crowds that assemble for the Swamp Pop Music Festival in July in Gonzales every year, or check out the packed dance floor at Grace’s Lounge in St. Amant when Ryan Foret and Foret Tradition hit the stage or when Don Rich plays his regular weekly show at the Rainbow Inn in Pierre Part. The secret to its longevity is how it embraces Louisiana traditions and makes it into something of its own.

“What the musicians and recording engineers did was come up with their own idea of what rock ‘n’ roll should sound like for the south Louisiana audience,” says Allan.

“It relies heavily on New Orleans, particularly Fats Domino-style music, that tripleting piano sound is very pronounced in swamp pop music. It’s mostly the ballads. There are a few fast songs that you’d classify as swamp pop, but really swamp pop is your tear-jerkers.”

Allan also adds that while Cajun and zydeco music get a lot of the attention, swamp pop outsold both genres, with hits across the pop and country charts. Freddy Fender adapted swamp pop for country audiences with “Wasted Days and Wasted Nights,” while Phil Phillips’ “Sea of Love” continues to be a beloved song. “That one was a monster,” says Allan.

So next time you are driving through Louisiana listening to KBON out of Eunice and you hear an old swamp pop tune that speaks to the classics while sounding just as bright today, it’s just the sound of Louisiana being itself.

Travel tip: Each Lundi Gras, the Monday before Mardi Gras, the Louisiana Swamp Pop Museum hosts a Swamp Pop Reunion concert. A limited number of tickets are sold, and they do sell out. Make this part of your Mardi Gras celebration!

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There is no greater example of how Louisiana enjoys being itself than swamp pop. It’s a style of music born out of a regional interpretation of rock ‘n’ roll in the 1950s that defies time, continuing its popularity today.

“Swamp pop music was created without us knowing it was a different genre,” says Johnnie Allan. Many call him the “King of Swamp Pop,” having recorded “Lonely Days and Lonely Nights” and his stirring version of “The Promised Land,” both swamp pop anthems. Allan is quick to add, “I don’t go around wearing a crown."

“Rod Bernard, Warren Storm, Tommy McClain, Clint West and I started recording this music in the late 1950s and early 1960s, not realizing that we were creating a new genre of music. It was called swamp pop in the 1970s by a guy from England named Bill Millar. We just called it south Louisiana music.

“It’s a gumbo or jambalaya; a true native Louisiana music genre,” explains Sharon Fontenot, curator of the Louisiana Swamp Pop Museum in Ville Platte, designated by the legislature in 1995 as the Swamp Pop Capital of the World. The museum is housed in a restored Southern Pacific train depot, where knowledgeable docents, some of whom are swamp pop musicians, tell about the jukebox, costumes and other items on display.

“It’s a cousin to zydeco and Cajun music, but is the red-headed stepchild that never got the recognition that the other two did.”

This may be true from a distance, but to swamp pop fans, it is the Louisiana music. Just witness the massive crowds that assemble for the Swamp Pop Music Festival in July in Gonzales every year, or check out the packed dance floor at Grace’s Lounge in St. Amant when Ryan Foret and Foret Tradition hit the stage or when Don Rich plays his regular weekly show at the Rainbow Inn in Pierre Part. The secret to its longevity is how it embraces Louisiana traditions and makes it into something of its own.

“What the musicians and recording engineers did was come up with their own idea of what rock ‘n’ roll should sound like for the south Louisiana audience,” says Allan.

“It relies heavily on New Orleans, particularly Fats Domino-style music, that tripleting piano sound is very pronounced in swamp pop music. It’s mostly the ballads. There are a few fast songs that you’d classify as swamp pop, but really swamp pop is your tear-jerkers.”

Allan also adds that while Cajun and zydeco music get a lot of the attention, swamp pop outsold both genres, with hits across the pop and country charts. Freddy Fender adapted swamp pop for country audiences with “Wasted Days and Wasted Nights,” while Phil Phillips’ “Sea of Love” continues to be a beloved song. “That one was a monster,” says Allan.

So next time you are driving through Louisiana listening to KBON out of Eunice and you hear an old swamp pop tune that speaks to the classics while sounding just as bright today, it’s just the sound of Louisiana being itself.

Travel tip: Each Lundi Gras, the Monday before Mardi Gras, the Louisiana Swamp Pop Museum hosts a Swamp Pop Reunion concert. A limited number of tickets are sold, and they do sell out. Make this part of your Mardi Gras celebration!